Title: Key Socioeconomic and Political Developments in Bangladesh
1Key Socio-economic and Political Developments in
Bangladesh
First BIPSS- ISAS Roundtable on
Singapore-Bangladesh Relations
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2Introduction
- A land of 56,977 sq mile/147,579 sq.km territory,
Bangladesh was home to 144.50m people in July
2008, expected to rise to 158.96m in July 2015
(1077 per sq.km in 2015). - A GDP of 67.7bn at the end of June 2007, growing
at 6.2 annually, reached 71.89bn at the end of
June 2008. Per capita GDP approximately 497.50.
Official publications claim higher figures. - This level of poverty, finite land and resources,
and growing population would rationally require
focusing national and governmental attention on
addressing demographic, economic and
environmental challenges. - Why has the reality of Bangladeshs political
experience been so different?
3Socio-economic developments (BBS, Statistical
Pocketbook, January 2009)
4Socio-economic developments (BBS, Statistical
Pocketbook, January 2009)
5Socio-economic developments (BBS, Statistical
Pocketbook, January 2009)
6General economic trends
- Present Governments budgetary proposals expected
to be presented before National Assembly in June
CTG budget modified by elected government in
operation now. - In 2007-08, international commodity prices,
especially relating to food and fuel, rose. As an
importer of both, Bangladesh faced significant
difficulties. - The government devoted 13.4 percent of GDP to
public spending in July 2006-June 2007 CTG
raised this to 15.9 percent of GDP in July
2007-June 2008 mainly to combat effects of
rising food- and fuel prices. That trend
continued in following FY. - Still, in early 2009, 58 percent of Bangladeshi
families malnourished.
7General economic trends
- Coping mechanisms partially protected Bangladesh
from global recession - Financial institutions poorly integrated into
global financial/investment processes - Falling commodity prices especially
of foodstuff and energy - Agricultural production significantly
aided economic activities - Dangers ahead are nonetheless increasingly
apparent - Demand for Bangladeshi exports, especially RMG,
falling in US/EU markets - Demand for Bangladeshi labour in the
Gulf/South-East Asia tapering off - Resultant convergence of falling remittances
and rising unemployment - Intellectual capacity and organisational
capability exist central bankers aware that an
annual rate of GDP growth at 7 percent sustained
over five consecutive years can generate
self-sustaining momentum of production,
investment and consumption, but Bangladesh has
not seen GDP growth of 7 percent sustained for
even two or three years. The political system
must provide an explanation.
8Key Political Developments
- October 2006 as BNP-led coalition steps down,
political disturbances begin, leading to some
violence - 11 January 2007 Army commanders, encouraged by
OECD donors led by Tuesday Club force President
to step down from self-appointed post of Chief
Adviser - A state of emergency declared, a technocratic CTG
appointed, a campaign against corruption
mounted eventually around 200 politicians,
family-members, and businessmen detained some
charged. - Detention and interrogation of untouchables
like the two Begums and close relatives has a
shock effect but eventually, many detainees are
released under unclear circumstances and rumours
of money changing hands become rife. - Despite stringent emergency measures and initial
apparent popular approval of efforts to recast
political landscape along rational lines, by
mid-2007, urban restiveness visible student
violence on major campuses triggered by minor
incident forces army to withdraw from a key
campus President eventually pardons teachers and
students held.
9Key Political Developments
- CTG/Army efforts to pursue a minus two formula,
establish new parties under alternative leaders,
and force major parties to reform fail Begums
intransigent Hasina and AL more amenable to a
negotiated arrangement Zia and BNP less willing. - As the agreed two-year window approaches final
quarter, CTG/Army and their sponsors acknowledge
failure, accept elections only rational exit
strategy, discover no election can be meaningful
without AL and BNP participation that demanded
restoration of Hasina and Zia to leadership.
Revolutionary changes to political landscape
abandoned. - Anti-corruption campaign wound down major
complaints against leaders either withdrawn by
plaintiffs, or inactivated High Court questions
legality of Emergency
10Key Political Developments
- Election Commission does make changes new
electoral rolls, photo-ID cards, transparent
ballot boxes. - Political party registration processes force
parties to accept changes to their constitution,
theoretical dilution of the leaders powers,
selection of candidates by local party organs
rather than by central fiat, de-linking of party
from student- and trades-union wings, limits on
campaign expenses. - All registered parties accept new terms and
conditions on paper but refuse to make actual
changes 87 percent of all MPs elected to the
9th parliament broke campaign expenditure rules. - Awami League sweeps to a landslide victory in
polls held on 29 December 2008.
11December 2008 parliamentary polls
- 300 parliamentary seats contested by 1,538 (141
independents) candidates - 38 parties registered under new electoral rules
- 81m-plus voters voting at 35,000-plus polling
stations - 86 turn out.
12Final results of the 2008 General Elections
13Post-election histrionics
- BNP allegations of election engineering
delayed taking of oaths - Differences over seating arrangements BNPs
refusal to join Assembly - Awami Leagues offer of Deputy Speakership,
committee chair, compromise - Campus violence, BCL-JCD, BCL-ICS, BCL-BCL
- Hasinas resignation from BCL chair continuing
factional fighting - State Minister for law, Justice and Parliamentary
Affairs accuses Chairman of Anti-corruption
Commission of illegal action and abuses Gen
Mashuud resigns - Hasina asks Zia to abandon leased home in the
garrison cancels lease - Massive reshuffle of civil service, police and
army officers - Governments initiative on beginning prosecution
of war criminals
14BDR mutiny biggest single bloody challenge to
Bangladeshi state and government
- Narratives diverge 57 senior and mid-ranking
officers killed in a few hours - DG BDR called PM other officers called Army and
RAB commanders - PMs determined political approach refusal to
army deployment - Negotiations and amnesty delegation to
Peelkhana some surrender and rescue - Mutineers refusal to surrender PMs carrot
stick troop deployment - Mutineers and other BDR troops flee bodies
found mutilation, rape, looting
15BDR mutiny biggest single bloody challenge to
Bangladeshi state and government
- Conspiracy theories abound (Most detailed
elaboration in The Holiday) - PM, ministers speak of deep conspiracy against
Hasina and democracy minister mentions Islamist
and right-wing threats, names JMB - BNP leaders speak of deep conspiracy does not
name source - Jamaat-e-Islami leaders speak of conspiracy by
Indian intelligence and AL - Indian media cite Pakistani, Saudi, British
intelligence, BNP and Islamists - Impact on state cohesion, military chain of
command, CMR severe
16Lessons not learnt
- National security, social civility, equity and a
shared sense of justice were inextricably
intertwined - Governance and service-delivery had suffered
grievously while the political elite wrangled in
internecine feuds, fragmenting the polity,
deepening the divisive polarisation which
rendered consensus on even fundamental issues
improbable, fracturing any residual societal
cohesion and increasing fragility - Internal divisions on such fundamental issues
created the space inviting external actors to
exploit them - A price had to be paid, mostly by those who had
no control over their circumstances - Civil-military relations are not an esoteric
category to be confined to academic and
intellectual exercises they are integral to
intra-state dynamics and have to be managed - Bangladeshis are victims of the consequences of
their own follies most devastatingly the
elites focus on ritualistic power-politics as an
instrument of acquisition by graft and a failure
to grasp the acute urgency of elemental threats
to collective survival.
17Conclusion Why has Bangladesh remained
perennially polarised and hence dysfunctional?
18Possible answer Elemental differences over the
definition of Bangladeshs national identity.
Built on the eastern two-thirds of Bengal,
divided on the basis of the two-nation theory
which created Pakistan, Bangladesh suffers from a
philosophical contradiction. On the one hand,
confessional differentiation the
Muslim-majority eastern Bengal became East
Pakistan. When East Pakistan rejected the
Partition and its confessional basis, logic would
have demanded an undoing of the Partition.
Building Bangladesh on East Pakistans ashes
brought together two mutually exclusive phenomena
rejection of the essence of the Partition which
had held Pakistan together, and maintenance of
the outcome of the Partition on this new-fangled
political construct.
19Validating this contradictory conjunction
eventually required the fashioning of a
Bangladeshi as opposed to Bengali national
identity for Bangladeshis relegitimising the
principle of the Partition. This ideational
sleight of hand provided a theoretical backstop
to the rise of a Bangladeshi nationalist
tendency, but its unstated result was the
transformation of India which included the
residual, non-Bangladeshi Bengal into the
mirror-image other against which Bangladesh
both distinguished itself and measured its own
performance. As it happened, an elite consensus
on this, Bangladeshs foundational value, has
eluded the country.
20Question and Answer Session
21Thank You
Bangladesh Institute of Peace and Security
Studies (BIPSS)
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